The answer is C.54.45.43.54
Answer:
Import java.awt.*;
import java.util.*;
public class Sprhere
{// Instance Data private double surfaceA, volume, r, diameter; //Constructors public Sphere ()
{r = 0;diameter = 0; surfaceA = 0;volume = 0;}
public Sphere (double radius, double d, double SA, double v)
{this. r = radius; this. diameter = d; this. surfaceA = SA;this.volume = v;}
//--------------------------------------------------------------------// Accesors.//--------------------------------------------------------------------public double get Radius()
{return r;}
public double get Diameter()
{return diameter;}
public double get SurfaceA()
{return surfaceA;}
public double get Volume()
{return volume;}
//--------------------------------------------------------------------// Mutators.//--------------------------------------------------------------------
A web application starts when a client sends a request to a server
import random
i = 1
while i <= 100:
print("#"+str(i)+": "+str(random.randint(1,100)), end=", ")
i+=1
print()
i = 1
while i <= 100:
print("#"+str(i)+": "+str(random.uniform(1,100)), end=", ")
i += 1
I hope this helps!
Let me re-write the proposition:
p↔q⊕(¬p↔¬r)∧¬q.
Generally, the number of rows in a truth table depends on the number of Variables. Here we have 3 Variables: p,q and r. Each of them can have either the value of 1 or 0, which gives us 2*2*2 possibilities, or 2³, that is 8 possibilities and 8 rows:
p=0, q=0, r=0
p=0, q=0, r=1
p=0, q=1, r=0
p=0, q=1, r=1
p=1, q=0, r=0
p=1, q=0, r=1
p=1, q=1, r=0
p=1, q=1, r=1